/etc/asterisk/func_odbc.conf is in asterisk-config 1:11.7.0~dfsg-1ubuntu1.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o640.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
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; func_odbc.conf
;
; Each context is a separately defined function. By convention, all
; functions are entirely uppercase, so the defined contexts should also
; be all-uppercase, but there is nothing that enforces this. All functions
; are case-sensitive, however.
;
; For substitution, you have ${ARG1}, ${ARG2} ... ${ARGn}
; for the arguments to each SQL statement.
;
; In addition, for write statements, you have ${VAL1}, ${VAL2} ... ${VALn}
; parsed, just like arguments, for the values. In addition, if you want the
; whole value, never mind the parsing, you can get that with ${VALUE}.
;
;
; If you have data which may potentially contain single ticks, you may wish
; to use the dialplan function SQL_ESC() to escape the data prior to its
; inclusion in the SQL statement.
;
;
; The following options are available in this configuration file:
;
; readhandle A comma-separated list of DSNs (from res_odbc.conf) to use when
; executing the readsql statement. Each DSN is tried, in
; succession, until the statement succeeds. You may specify up to
; 5 DSNs per function class. If not specified, it will default to
; the value of writehandle or dsn, if specified.
; writehandle A comma-separated list of DSNs (from res_odbc.conf) to use when
; executing the writesql statement. The same rules apply as to
; readhandle. "dsn" is a synonym for "writehandle".
; readsql The statement to execute when reading from the function class.
; writesql The statement to execute when writing to the function class.
; insertsql The statement to execute when writing to the function class
; succeeds, but initially indicates that 0 rows were affected.
; prefix Normally, all function classes are prefixed with "ODBC" to keep
; them uniquely named. You may choose to change this prefix, which
; may be useful to segregate a collection of certain function
; classes from others.
; escapecommas This option may be used to turn off the default behavior of
; escaping commas which occur within a field. If commas are
; escaped (the default behavior), then fields containing commas
; will be treated as a single value when assigning to ARRAY() or
; HASH(). If commas are not escaped, then values will be separated
; at the comma within fields. Please note that turning this option
; off is incompatible with the functionality of HASH().
; synopsis Appears in the synopsis field for the command
; 'core show function <function name>'
; mode This option may be set to 'multirow' to allow the function
; specified to return more than a single row. However, this
; changes the way that func_odbc normally works. Instead of the
; invocation of the function returning a row, it returns an opaque
; ID, which may be passed to ODBC_FETCH() to return each row in
; turn. ODBC_FETCH_STATUS returns SUCCESS or FAILURE, to indicate
; whether any results were stored, and you should call ODBC_Finish
; on the ID to clean up any remaining results when you are done
; with the query. Also, the variable ODBCROWS is set initially,
; which may be used in an iterative fashion to return each row in
; the result.
; Please note that multirow queries are isolated to the channel,
; and rows may not be fetched outside of the channel where the
; query was initially performed. Additionally, as the results are
; associated with a channel, mode=multirow is incompatible with
; the global space.
; rowlimit Rowlimit limits the total number of rows which can be stored for
; that query. For mode=multirow, otherwise, func_odbc will
; attempt to store all rows in the resultset, up to the maximum
; amount of memory. In normal mode, rowlimit can be set to allow
; additional rows to be fetched, rather than just the first one.
; These additional rows can be returned by using the name of the
; function which was called to retrieve the first row as an
; argument to ODBC_FETCH().
; ODBC_SQL - Allow an SQL statement to be built entirely in the dialplan
[SQL]
dsn=mysql1
readsql=${ARG1}
; ODBC_ANTIGF - A blacklist.
[ANTIGF]
dsn=mysql1,mysql2 ; Use mysql1 as the primary handle, but fall back to mysql2
; if mysql1 is down. Supports up to 5 comma-separated
; DSNs. "dsn" may also be specified as "readhandle" and
; "writehandle", if it is important to separate reads and
; writes to different databases.
readsql=SELECT COUNT(*) FROM exgirlfriends WHERE callerid='${SQL_ESC(${ARG1})}'
syntax=<callerid>
synopsis=Check if a specified callerid is contained in the ex-gf database
; ODBC_PRESENCE - Retrieve and update presence
[PRESENCE]
dsn=mysql1
readsql=SELECT location FROM presence WHERE id='${SQL_ESC(${ARG1})}'
writesql=UPDATE presence SET location='${SQL_ESC(${VAL1})}' WHERE id='${SQL_ESC(${ARG1})}'
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